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MacArthur's Park is Screaming 
 

By John Calvin Jones

***

May Day was never about fear

Just to celebrate our lives

But cops won’t give us a chance

 

MacArthur’s Park is screaming from the shots

All the sweet baton blows, flowing down

Cops in riot gear saw a march

I don’t think the crowd can take it

‘Cause their rights don’t let them make it

No those Mexicans won’t never march again

 

I recall the camera crews

And the kids

On the ground and running scared

Tear-stained mothers clutch tender babies

And the Uniforms beating heads in the breeze

 

MacArthur's Park is bleeding after dark

And the feet of Riot Cops stomping down

Someone saw them beat us and the pain

I didn't think that LA would do it

But they got power, they abuse it

And Telemundo has it all on film …


Brown Dreams

by Paul Flores (Inspired by Jorge Mariscal and Richard Rodriguez)


This is a true story about a brown dream sinking to the bottom of the Tigris Euphrates

This is a brown dream.

It was Francisco's last night out with his friends
the three of them on their way to see the latest sci-fi movie. 
They were driving.
A stereo jocking the newest top 40 rapper, 
because that was all he listened to.
But it didn't matter.

Music was only part of the setting
and not the motivation for late night 
brainstorms about how to make money,
or how to escape the feeling of being 
left out of a dream so many painted 
red white and blue.

But his dream was brown. 
Brown as his skin. 
Brown and impure.
Brown as Eve's apple after she took the first bite.
Brown as the everlasting blur of English, African and Indian
moving through the forests of this continent
four hundred years ago before it was known as destiny.
Before he had ever heard the word immigrant,
beaner, spic, stupid, dirty.
Before he had ever dreamt of assimilation.

He is 18, and Mexican.
He is in San Diego, 
Topeka, Buffalo, San Antonio,
Oakland, CA.
He wants a piece of the American Dream.

Francisco wanted a college degree. 
He wanted to be a professional,
a stockbroker, or FBI agent,
because those were the jobs with the most power.
If he could have been a rock star or a super hero
there would have been no need to enlist.
But he had to be a U.S. citizen 
if he was going to make a living like them.

The Army recruiter at his high school
told him that if he served in the military
he could automatically become a U.S. citizen.
After four years duty and an honorable discharge
there would be plenty of money left over 
for him to continue his education at a good institution.
Or he could take his technical skills 
as a tank operator 
or small weapons expertise
and apply them to a civilian job.

It was exciting;
Brown boy who wasn't even a citizen, 
who had only been a resident five years, 
who didn't know much about education,
was now willing to die to become a student.

One year later 
he was working on a tank unit fighting in Iraq.
Francisco heard it was the second time
the president had invaded this nation.
They were driving in the desert.
They were taking fire, swerving. 
The tank lost control
and headed straight into the river.

As Francisco's lungs filled up with water
he remembered his last night out with his friends; 
How is mother had wanted to cook dinner for him
but he didn't want to spend another hour in that
cramped apartment where she cooked for six of his brothers,
his two uncles and their compadres.
Instead Francisco invited Jose and Diego out to the movies
because that's what Americans did.

Now his soul is an ancestor in the Euphrates.
Chicano blood mixing with Arab soil, 
returning to the Garden of Eden 
by way of the U.S. Army, 
same way it had come.

Only this time, he would finally receive
something he had been promised: 
An officially sealed envelope on top of Old Glory.
Citizenship was never earned so graciously.
Even, if it comes posthumously
at least extend it to the victim's family!
The reality of the American Dream is dirty.
Why should Chicanos have to die
to earn the approval of this society?**

This is a brown dream.
Brown as the bus riders union.
Brown as gasoline.
Brown as the Tigris-Euphrates 
The Mississippi, and the Rio Grande.
Brown as coyotes.
Brown as blood soaked sands in Iraq
and on the ranches of Arizona border vigilantes.
Brown as Affirmative Action in the military but not the university.

This is a brown dream. 

c. 2003

My World

By: Leslie Morones

Heart beating to the indigenous rhythms of my roots

Pumping smooth soothing chants of prayers

through my veins, returning them back to my brain

Expelling words to describe the emotions that thrive inside

Repetitive notions playing out the struggle

like a soldier would a loss battle

Tears filled with stories, secrets, and shame

flowing down destiny lane

Relieving the some of the pain 

Every lost childhood moment photographed and posted on the walls

of my soul creating an endless vibration

Notifying the universe of my salutation 

Dreams dance to the music my heart produces

Composing a new genre, called love

Empty spaces of my being filled

by the angelic sounds of completion 

Smiles suddenly emerge to greet 

this new way of life as a mother would 

to her newborn child

Stating that it was all worth my while!

Copyright © 2007 UNITY


Diosa Bronzera

By Efren Tlecoz Paredes

I dedicate this poem to my mother, Velia, and the Latina mothers of the world.

Diosa bronzera
anointed mother of life 
First guide and protector 
a multitude of delights.

Nurturer of goodness 
we emulate your ways
Which sustain our existence
'til our last waking day.

Vanish the cold
with the warmth of your arms 
The lessons you teach us 
we wear them like charms.

Your devotion a testament
why your legacy endures
Hold the world in your hands
as if it were yours.

The calm voice of reason 
that rings in our ear 
Your tone is melodic 
the knowledge of seers.

A heart full of treasure 
a luminous star
Seemingly ever-present 
you watch from afar.

Your compassion so gentle 
exuberant with care
Like the beauty of mariposas 
that glide through the air.

Create light in the darkness
you calm all our fears
Impart us with wisdom
wipe away all our tears.

Commune with the Cihuateteo
in the Circle of Fire 
Survive through the ages 
never rest or retire.

Through the annals of history 
you've sat on a throne
Reigned over kingdoms
had your name carved in stone.

Your portrait adorns
sacred temple halls
On ceilings and mantles
in glyphs on the walls.

You've held your fists in the air
gripping scepters and rods
Stood at La Pirámide del Sol
where men become gods.

A courageous noble warrior
a reflection of Ollin
Your memory will be honored
as a descendant of Queens.

Diosa bronzera
keep leading the way 
For the gift of our lives
We thank you each day.

Copyright © 2007 by Efren Tlecoz Paredes

****

Cihuateteo: Nahuatl (Aztec) for "goddesses."

La Pirámide del Sol: "The Pyramid of the Sun" located in Teotihuacán, Mexico along the Avenue of the Dead, in between the Pyramid of the Moon and the Ciudadela, and in the shadow of the massive mountain Cerro Gordo.  The pyramid is part of a large complex in the heart of the city.

Ollin: Nahuatl (Aztec) for "the sacred movement in continuum, which gives impulse to our world."